LotM - Oct 15: Ngutanese
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Diphthongs and Austronesian alignment ring in October's LotM winner, Ngutanese! A hearty congrats to emma and her brainchild.
This public article was written by [Deactivated User], and last updated on 10 Nov 2021, 02:49.
[comments] [history] ngulotm oct 15lotm
10. LotM - Aug 17: Mayessa
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11. LotM - Aug 18: Tsienic
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12. LotM - Aug 19: Xhorial
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18. LotM - Dec 19: Siren
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21. LotM - Feb 16: Jutean
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40. LotM - Jun 16: Silvish
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54. LotM - May 18: Uyendur
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55. LotM - May 19: Norþic
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58. LotM - Nov 15: Aveli
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60. LotM - Nov 17: Adenish
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62. LotM - Nov 19: Balak
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68. LotM - Oct 17: Ulyan
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69. LotM - Oct 18: Umofa
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70. LotM - Oct 19: Amaian
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72. LotM - Sep 15: Mbamigi
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73. LotM - Sep 16: Lonish
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75. LotM - Sep 18: Rùma
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76. LotM - Sep 19: Mikyoan
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@[Deactivated User] pulls in her first LotM win with Ngutanese. Ngutanese features all sorts of fun features, including Austronesian alignment, solar and lunar noun classes, tons of copulas (ok, just six), and VSO word order (#vsofolife). Let's do this.
What Ngutanese lacks in consonants, it more than makes up for in vowels. There are just 11 phonemic consonants, /m n ŋ p t k s h j w ɾ/. No voiced obstruents at all. /t/ and /s/ palatalize to /t͡ɕ/ and /ɕ/, respectively, before /i(:)/. /h/ also has the interesting side effect of nasalizing any vowel that directly follows it.
Vowels are a bit more numerous. The normal /a e i o u/ are present, as well as their long counterparts /a: e: i: o: u:/. There are seven diphthongs, each with a long counterpart, leading to 24 phonemic vocalic thingamajigs: /ei̯(:) au̯(:) ai̯(:) ui̯(:) eu̯(:) ou̯(:) oi̯(:)/. All vowels also have nasal allophones when following /h/. Long vowels are noted with macrons in the orthography, but these macron-carrying vowels are not separate letters in the alphabet.
Syllable structure and not complex, allowing (C)V(V)(N) at the max, with C as any consonant, V as any vowel, and N as any nasal. Nasals can be syllable-final only at the ends of words. @[Deactivated User] was also kind enough to include a note on stress, stating:
Stress isn't phonemic, but there's a slight stress on the last syllable that has a long vowel; if there is no long vowel, the stress is on the penultimate syllable.
Nouns are divvied into two classes, solar and lunar. These two classes seem arbitrary (though some assignments make sense, such as owl being lunar), and designate how the noun will decline. Nouns come in seven cases (direct, ergative, accusative, genitive, dative, and instrumental) and three numbers (singular, plural, and collective).
Verbs do not seem to inflect - though perhaps they do and it hasn't been documented. ;P
There are six different copulas (each more or less meaning "to be") in Ngutanese, each with a specific use:
- eoasa - to be made of/consist of
- ēoa - denotes transience (compare Portguese/Spanish estar)
- soāi - to be there, exist (think Spanish haber, hay German gibt's, or French il y a)
- toata - to be located, to exist in space
- ipoi - to be, used for describing the weather
- eoa - to be, everything else
Ngutanese is a member of the Ngutanic family (of which four of the seven extant languages begin with <ng>). Its closest relative, Ingomuese, is extinct, though there are five other living relatives.
Crave more? Check out its namebase, grammar tables, or translations.
Got suggestions for how the next LotM should be written? See something in Ngutanese that wasn't covered and you wish it had been? Hate my guts and want to tell me? Feel free to shoot us (either phi2dao or argyle) a PM with your thoughts, suggestions, and hate mail. Also feel free to drop by the LotM clan if you have other feedback, want to join in the voting process, or nominate a language!
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on 10/11/21 02:490[Deactivated User]folder fix
on 06/10/21 21:320[Deactivated User]moved article to correct folder
on 20/05/21 05:080[Deactivated User]pronouns